Hello, I'm hoping some kind soul out there might give me some advice on my new purchase. I've bought a Fobco Star. I also bought the Fobco collection of manuals/guides an dbrochures.
It looks to me as though my piller drill has a long extension between the end of the quill and the chuck, maybe 2.5" long. There's a Jacobs chuck on the end. (photos will be available this weekend when I have sufficient light to take them).
In the guide the description says
On early versions of the drill three choices of spindle end were available: a ordinary Jacobs No. 6 taper (to carry no. 34 Jacob chuck) or a long external taper having either a No. 1 or No. 2 Morse insert. While the latter two were adequate for light work, because the bottom speed was too high for use with larger drills it was decided (in the early 1990s, and rather late in the day) to modify the assembly by making that section of the head holding the clamp-on chuck guard an integral part of the casting. This increase in diameter and length allowed a larger, 25 mm ID bottom bearing to be fitted together with a bored-out quill assembly to take a spindle with either internal No. 1 or No. 2 Morse taper - or an external chuck-mounting Jacobs fitting. The later quill and spindle assembly can be used as a direct replacement in the earlier machines and substantially improve their drilling performance.
I understand bits of this but I'm not confident I fully understand all of it.
My questions are:
why would there be a long extension?
doesn't that simply reduce the capacity of the drill?
would it be better to replace this with something shorter?
what would you recommend as a replacement?
am I just stupid to think this way?
any help appreciated.
It looks to me as though my piller drill has a long extension between the end of the quill and the chuck, maybe 2.5" long. There's a Jacobs chuck on the end. (photos will be available this weekend when I have sufficient light to take them).
In the guide the description says
On early versions of the drill three choices of spindle end were available: a ordinary Jacobs No. 6 taper (to carry no. 34 Jacob chuck) or a long external taper having either a No. 1 or No. 2 Morse insert. While the latter two were adequate for light work, because the bottom speed was too high for use with larger drills it was decided (in the early 1990s, and rather late in the day) to modify the assembly by making that section of the head holding the clamp-on chuck guard an integral part of the casting. This increase in diameter and length allowed a larger, 25 mm ID bottom bearing to be fitted together with a bored-out quill assembly to take a spindle with either internal No. 1 or No. 2 Morse taper - or an external chuck-mounting Jacobs fitting. The later quill and spindle assembly can be used as a direct replacement in the earlier machines and substantially improve their drilling performance.
I understand bits of this but I'm not confident I fully understand all of it.
My questions are:
why would there be a long extension?
doesn't that simply reduce the capacity of the drill?
would it be better to replace this with something shorter?
what would you recommend as a replacement?
am I just stupid to think this way?
any help appreciated.